We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website. This website uses cookies that provide targeted advertising and which track your use of this website. By clicking ‘continue’ or by continuing to use our website, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time.ContinueFind out more

Definition of incorporeal in US English:

incorporeal

adjective

‘The Stoics drew a fundamental distinction between two realms of being, a material realm of bodies and states of affairs and an incorporeal realm of events.’

‘They are spiritual beings, incorporeal intelligences, and they may ‘have their origins in personalities’.’

‘The thing indicated by the word, and the word's relationship to it must, in effect, disappear in order for language to be transacted at the incorporeal, or the transcendental level of meaning and idea.’

‘But in the common variety, they're ordinary people who believe it's their calling to help people worship a particular incorporeal deity instead of rocks.’

‘Since the causes are immaterial, intellectual and eternal, so their created effects are essentially incorporeal, immaterial, intellectual, and eternal.’